Publication | Open Access
ChatGPT: Beginning of an End of Manual Linguistic Data Annotation? Use Case of Automatic Genre Identification
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2023
Year
EngineeringAutomatic Annotation ToolAnnotation ServiceLarge Language ModelCorpus LinguisticsText MiningNatural Language ProcessingApplied LinguisticsLanguage DocumentationComputational LinguisticsLanguage EngineeringLanguage StudiesChatgpt UsageContent AnalysisMachine TranslationNatural LanguageNlp TaskUse CaseAnnotation ToolAutomatic Genre IdentificationSlovenian LanguageLanguage CorpusLinguisticsAutomatic Annotation
ChatGPT has shown strong capabilities in natural language generation tasks, which naturally leads researchers to explore where its abilities end. In this paper, we examine whether ChatGPT can be used for zero-shot text classification, more specifically, automatic genre identification. We compare ChatGPT with a multilingual XLM-RoBERTa language model that was fine-tuned on datasets, manually annotated with genres. The models are compared on test sets in two languages: English and Slovenian. Results show that ChatGPT outperforms the fine-tuned model when applied to the dataset which was not seen before by either of the models. Even when applied on Slovenian language as an under-resourced language, ChatGPT's performance is no worse than when applied to English. However, if the model is fully prompted in Slovenian, the performance drops significantly, showing the current limitations of ChatGPT usage on smaller languages. The presented results lead us to questioning whether this is the beginning of an end of laborious manual annotation campaigns even for smaller languages, such as Slovenian.